i Iff ficials .Deny E
xclusion off 'Negroes .From Basketball
Greyhound Breeders Call for Local
Voting on Issue of Dog Race Tracks
Move Follows
Track Rejection
At Wilsonville
Salem (BPD Oregon Grey
hound breeders Monday
switched signals and called
for local-option voting on dog
racing tracks.
The plea came on the heels
of a racing commission ae
cision to reject a proposed
track at Wilsonville.
Last week's shouting, gavel
pounding hearing before the
House Planning and Develop
ment committee - just a few
hours before the racing com
mission acted - brought a
plea that the future of such
tracks be left with tne com
mission, and not taken to the
voters.
The House committee was
considering a bill designed to
outlaw the Wilsonville tracx.
It would prohibit the granting
of more than one racing meet
for each 400,000 population,
and require at least 100 miles
between tracks.
At Monday's session, Rep,
Richard Kennedy (D-Eugene)
proposed amending the 100
mile limit to 15'0 miles "so
Lane county would be includ
ed in any prohibition."
Jim Garber, president of
the Oregon Greyhound Breed
ers association, said he felt
"this bill will hurt the Grey
hound industry."
He charged the bill would
limit competition among dog
tracks.
"All we ask is that you let
the people vote," he said.
Also testifying against the
bill were Don Watson and C.
S. Auger.
Tired of Tag
Watson said "we are getting
sick and tired of being called
immoral" because of the
gambling. "The majority of
people bet on something, they
are not Immoral."
Members of the racing com
mission had been invited to
attend the hearing, but de
clined. The commission said
It had adopted a policy of
"non-interference" 1 regarding
legislation,
Couple Hikes Ouf
After Aufo Stuck
Portland - (UPI - A young
man and his expectant wife
walked about 17 miles after
their car got stuck in the
snow on the cast side of Mt.
Hood.
Howard Lackman, 23, and
his wife. Sue, both of Port
land, said they drove about
35 miles east of Government
Camp Sunday on the Waplnl
tia cutoff and then took a
side road. Their car became
stuck when they tried to turn
around.
Lackman said they spend the
night in the car and began the
hike out Monday morning.
They reached Wamic about
2:30 p.m.
They were in good condi
tion except for being footsore.
Family members had alert
ed police when Lackman and
his wife, both employees of
the U. S. National bank, did
not show up for work.
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Regional Edition
MEDFORDfflTRIBUNE
MEDFORD,
Words Exchanged
Over New Plane
For Gov. Brown
Sacramenlo-IIPI)-A Republi
can assemblyman and Gov.
Edmund G. Brown's finance
director exchanged words to-
day over the need for a new
gubernatorial airplane.
Assemblyman Don mui-
ford (R-Piedmont) lower
chamber GOP caucus chair
man, was the first to mention
Ihe matter. He brought it up
in a letter to Finance Director
Hale Champion.
The lawmaker pointed out
that Brown invited the legis
lators to delete all expendi
tures in California's $3.2 bil
lion budget that do not pro
vide direct and necessary serv
ices to the people.
Then he mentioned the air
plane item which says simply:
Provision Is made for ac
quiring an executive airplane
to be operated In conjunction
with the automotive popl."
No Explanation
"Since this item Is burled
so abscurely in a subsection
on state garages ana since
there is absolutely no explana
tion for the need or the rea
son for the inclusion of this
Item," said Mulford, "It is
difficult to assist the governor
with his invitation to look
for economics in connection
with this item."
Sen. Robert J. Lagomarslno
(R-Ventura) introduced a bill
to allow arrest at night on a
warrant for misdemeanors
when the person to be arrest
ed is in a public place. He
also introduced a measure to
allow a person to be s
tenced In the county of arrest
or residence on warrants is
sued bv other counties.
' A bill allowing sale of
liquor on the days of all but
statewide, county or city elec
tions was introduced by Sen,
Hugh M. Burns (D-Frcsno).
It would allow the shIc of
liquor during school district
and Irrigation district clec
(Ions.
Cuban Refugees
Plucked From Sea
Miami - (UNI - A tanker
plucked 44 Cuban refugees
from a small, open boat near
the Florida Keys Monday
night.
The group was believed the
largest to floe Cuba since
Cuban Premier Fidel Castro
came lnlo power.
The Coast Guard at Miami
said the group included 14
men, 13 women and 17 chil
dren. They were transferred from
(ho tanker Hess Diesel to
three Coast Guard pntrol
boats and brought to Miami
for processing.
TO DRIVE.
SEE YOUR IOCAI AUTHORIZED
J. R. WHITNEY OLDSMOBILE, 415 So. Riverside Ave.
: T r
OREGON, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1963
Foreign Briefs
U.S., NATIONALIST CHINA PLAN WAR GAMES
Taipei, Formoia-lUPll-U.S. and Nationalist Chinit para
troopers will participate in their third joint exercise in
southern Formosa beginning Feb. 23.
An announcement here said the live day war games will
provide field training in paratroopers defense operations
gainst possible invaders.
ADENAUER PARTY CHAIRMAN GOING TO U.S.
Bonn, Germany-WPII-A spokesman for Chancellor Konrad
Adenauer's Christian Democratic party said Monday that
Party Chairman Heinrich von Brentano will fly to Washing
ton at the end of March to confer with American officials,
FRANKFURTERS PLAN SYNAGOGUE IN ISRAEL
Frankfurt, Germany-OIPll-The
agreed Monday to set aside $5,000 toward the construc
tion of a synagogue in Israel. '
A spokesman said it will
synagogue in Neve-Efraim and
20 per cent of the amount.
SPANISH AIRLINE RESUMES FLIGHT TO CUBA
Madrld-IUPIi-The first Spanish commercial airliner from
Havana since the Cuban missile crisis landed here Monday
carrying 30 passengers.
Iberia airlines resumed Its
last Saturday.
Moderate
Noted on
New York - IUPII - Moderate
selling continued on the stock
market today.
Rails and steels held com
paratively steady but some
leading inter national ous,
chemicals and auto shares
softened. The blue chip fea
tures were Du Pont, Chrysler
and General Foods, all down
around a point.
Bullish news had no etlecl
on individual stocks but bad
news caused sharp sclloffs.
Typical were Midwest Oil,
unchanged on a dividend
boost. Texas Pacific Coal St
Oil down a fraction despite
confirmation of take-over ru
mors but Bath Iron down 3
points on news of a dividend
slash.
DOW JONES AVERAGES
New York-IDPII-Dow Jones
final slock averagos: 30 in
dustrials 674.74, off 5.18;
20 railroads 151.58, up 0.17;
15 utilities 135.94, up 0.22.
and 65 stocks 240.98, off
0-88. Sales Monday were
about 3.88 million shares
compared with 3.89 million
shares Friday.
Mnnrhiy'i prices on
selected
4I,
.IS,
in 'i
47
2l,
i2;i;ls
an i
4S",
52'
SH't
30 'i
30',
IT.
asn
ST.
ra-'s
4mt
27
41'.
Mnckii:
Allied Chemical
Alum Co Am
Amerlcim Air Lines ixd) .
American Can
American Motor.
AT&T
American Tobacco
Anaconda Copper
Armco
nendlx Corn
Bethlehem Steel
HneinR Air
Brunnwlek
Caterpillar Corp
Chrysler Corp txdl
Coca Cola
C B S
Columbia (in
Continental can
Crown Zcllerbach
Crucible Steel
Curttst. Wrtsht
Dow Chemical
Dti Pont
Eastman Kodak
Firestone
Kord
..itm
.. 3.V,
.. 43.
OlDSMOtllE QUALITY DEALER --
Page 2A
city fathers of Frankfurt
cost about $25,000 to build a
Frankfurt will donate about
bimonthly service to Cuba
Selling
Market
General Electric
Genera hoods (xdl ....
General Motors
Georgia Pacific
Greyhound -
Gulf on
Homestake .....
Idaho Power
I.B.M
Int Paoer
... 78?.
... 83
... 62',.
... 46's
... 33's
... 41 i
... si :
... 30.
...417'.
... 29i
... 45 ' i
... 72 t
... 52'b
... Bl i
... 8.1
... 37 'i
... 333.
... 4
... 17'.
... 42 U
... 31
... 47,
... 11'.
... 13'3
.... tavi
.... 74
.... em
.... 4214
.... 47 '.
... 2.1 V.
... 7li,
... 3'i
... U2t.
... 54
... S'.i
.. 13-"i
.. b'4"4
.. 52 i
.. .10 i
ii,
!)"',
.. 3!)1
.. 14i
.. 21
... 27
... -t.-.n
... ll-a
... 44 1.
...107 H
II',
... 48
.. 33 ' i
... 40 'i
... 45
... 44 'j
... 34'
... 34'i
... 80a4
Johns Manville
Kennecott Copper
Lockheed Aircraft
Martin ....
Mertck
Montana Power
Montgomery Ward ....
Nafl Biscuit
New York Central
Northern Pacific
Pac Gas Elec
Penney J. C
Penn RR
Perma Cement
Phillips
Procter Ac Gamble
Radio Corporation ....
Richfield Oil IxdJ
Safeway
Santa Fa
Sears
Shell Oil
Soconv Mohll Oil
Southern Co
Southern Pacific
Sperrv Rand
Standard California ...
Standard Indiana
Standard N. J
Stokcly Van Camp
Sun Mines
Texas Co
Texas Gulf Sulrur
Texas Pac Land Trust .
Thlokol
Trans America
Trans World Air
Tri-ConttnentHl
Union Carbide
Union Pacllic
United Aircraft
United Air Lines txdl .
U.S. Plywood
u s. Rubber
U.S. Steel
West Bank Corp
Westinfihouse
Youugstown (xd)
TOP MISSILE BASE
Washington - IUPII - Grand
Folks, N.D., Air Force Base
will be headquarters for con
trol of the 150 Minuteman
missiles requested in Presi
dent Kennedy's new defense
budget. When completed,
Grand Forks will be the sixth
Minutenian base. The Air
Force then will have 950 in
tercontinental ballistic m I s
silcs. v. I, w
Administration
Seeks To Calm
Taxpayer Fears
Washington-tllPll-The admin
istration sought today to calm
the anxiety of home owners
who would lose a portion of
their favorite income tax de
ductions under President Ken
nedy's tax plan.
Treasury Secretary Douglas
Dillon stressed again Monday
night that virtually every tax
payer would pay less to the
government if the President's
proposals are approved by
Congress.
Under the program, he said
the home owner would end
up with more money in his
pocket from cuts in tax rate,
even if some of his deductions
were taken away.
The President has proposed
a $10 billion net reduction in
rates over a three-year period,
tied in with tax reforms re
moving some present tax
privileges.
Limits Deductions
One of the proposed chang
es would permit the taxpayer
to deduct only those itemized
expenses which exceed 5 per
cent of his income. This would
include interest on home
mortgages, local taxes and
contributions.
The Treasury told Congress
Monday that Individual in
come tax rates would have to
be set higher than Kennedy
proposed if the lawmakers
spurn his plea for restrictions
on deductions.
It said the alternative to
curbing tax deductions was a
tax rate schedule ranging
from 14.3 per cent to 75 per
cent. This compares with a
14-65 per cent range in Ken
nedy's plan and the present
20-91 per cent.
Higher Rates Necessary
The Treasury said the high
cr rates would be necessary
to offset the loss of $2.3 bil
lion in new revenue that the
limit on tax deductions was
designed to produce.
Administration strategists
were convinced that the phase
of the tax program pertaining
to deductions was meeting the
most resistance from the gen
eral public.
Some homebuilders claimed
the deduction change would
discourage home buying be
cause it would reduce the tax
advantage that now goes with
owning a home.
Stowaways Found
Asleep in Boat
Portland OIPD Three teen
age boys from The Dalles
were found asleep in a life
boat aboard the SS Oregon
Mail here early today.
Police said the boys, two
age 15 and one 16, told offi
cers they hiked the 82 miles
to Portland and had planned
to stay hidden aboard the
ship to go to Japan and other
ports in the Orient.
A special officer told police
he had seen three boys loiter
ing about the dock and be
lieved they hiight have slipped
aboard. Officers searched and
found the boys curled up in
a lifeboat, asleep.
They were turned over to
juvenile authorities pending
return lo their homes.
BACK TO GOLFING
Manchester, N.H. - IUPII -Male
golfers will have ieis
distractions in trying lo break
par on New Hampshire
courses this year. Mrs. Nora
Crimes, president of the New
Hampshire Women's Golf as
sociation, said Monday the
organization was banning
short shorts.
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GRESSETT'S DRIVE-IN CLEANERS
702 West Main
NU-WAY CLEANERS
601 East Main
Legislator Asks
House Committee
To Table Bill
Corvallis-IUPU-Oregon State
officials denied today there
was any "systematic exclu
sion" of Negroes from the var
sity basketball team as charg
ed by a state legislator.
State Rep. Berkeley Lent
(D-Portland) said in Salem
Monday he d'd not know of
a Negro making the squad in
the 35 years that Amory T.
(Slats) Gill has been head
coach at Oregon State.
OSU Sports Publicity Pirec
tor Johnny Eggers said that
Norm Monroe, a Negro, play
ed in six varsity basketball
games during the 1960-61 sea
son. He said that Monroe also
a trackman, quit because he
felt "he was not good enough
to help the team."
Tried To Get Moore
Gill said "find me a good
boy, a good student who can
get into school and a good
basketball player and see
whether I'll take him."
Eggers added that "we tried
real hard to get Glenn Moore
(a Negro and starting center
on the University of Oregon
basketball team) to come to
our school."
Lent made his remarks to
the House Education Commit
tee in asking the commit
tee to table a bill he had in
troduced because "there are a
couple of situations in our
own back yard which can
stand cleaning up."
The bill would have pre
vented OSU or Oregon from
entering into athletic arrange
ments with the University of
Mississippi or any other school
which holds athletic contests
with Mississippi.
3,000-Mile Censure
Lent said the idea of his
bill was a "3,000-mile censure
of 'Ole Miss' " because of con
tinuing anti- Negro behavior
by its students.
Lent said another situation
which needed attention in Or
egon was the continuation of
two fraternities whose nation
al charters contain discrim
inatory clauses.
The fraternities, Sigma Nu
and Alpha Tau Omega, said
they are relesaed from the
clauses in their Oregon oper
ations. "Before we go after another
state . . . we should clean up
our own mess," Lent said.
Industrialist Tells
Group of Machines
Eugene - Within the next
decade only a minor portion
of the working population
will be required to produce
all of the goods and services
needed to maintain the Ameri
can society, according to Ed
win F. Shelley, vice president
of U.S. Industries, Inc., a New
York firm which manufactur
ers automation equipment.
Shelley spoke last week
during the Pacific Northwest
Assembly al the Village Green
in Cottage Grove, which is
discussing the problems of the
impact of automation and
technological change. The As
sembly is co-sponsored by the
American Assembly and the
University of Oregon.
Shelley urged that when
people arc relieved of rou
tine, machine-like jobs, they
be given the opportunity to
participate in scientific inves
tigations, e x p I o r a 1 1 on of
space, and study of society.
"The urgent prerequisite
for this intelligent use of
human beings is education on
a scale not now approached,"
he said. "To accomplish the
educational task it is impor
tant to apply the new technol
ogies themselves to the educa
tion of our people and to the
organization of our productive
society."
He described several new
automated devices which are
causing the technological
change.
MINIMUM
ORDER
$1.90
Spotting Onlyl
Hatfield
Long Beach, Calif. (UPll
Oregon Gov. Mark Hatfield
called on the Republican par
ty to restate the Lincolnian
principles of compassion and
humility in order to recap
ture its former strength.
The 40-year-old chief exe
cutive often mentioned as a
possible running mate to Nel
son Rockefeller in the presi
dential election in 1964, de
livered a 30-minute off-the-cuff
speech Monday night to
more than 600 persons at a
Lincoln Day audience here.
He said compassion and
humility were the genesis of
the GOP strength, "but the
party has not always held
this."
Principles Diluted
The party has allowed the
Lincolnian principles "to be
diluted and diminished in the
eyes of the American people
by a very capable opposition
party and compassion was
taken from our mantle," he
said. "We often stood by and
permitted it to happen."
He said the Republican par
ty is the party of civil rights,
but that the Democrats have
capitalized on this theme in
recent elections.
Hatfield was critical of a
segment of the GOP attempt
ing to win over Southern seg
regationists. He asked:
"Should we go into the
South and sacrifice our posi
tion on civil rights by out
segregating the segregation
ists of the opposition? It's too
high a price to pay for a
few paltry votes in the
south."
Majorities Lost
He said he would rather
"go down to defeat than turn
his back" on the party's tra
ditional championship of civil
rights.
The governor said Oregon's
over whelming Republican
legislative majorities were
completely lost within four
years because the party
"failed to stay true to the
party tradition of local gov
ernment. We were so con
cerned with the defeat of
Wayne Morse that we lost the
whole state of Oregon."
Earlier, at a news confer
ence, Hatfield said Rockefel
ler "would offer the strongest
choice for Republican victory
in 1954," if the GOP primar
ies were held at this time.
FIRE IN PASCO
Pasco- (UPll -Fire destroyed
the Columbia Basin Import
Co., in the Pasco Industrial
Park on the Columbia :iver
here Saturday.
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CURRENT DIVIDEND 4 PER ANNUM :'
vwuiga
and LOAN ASSOCIATION
201 West 6th
Free Customer Parking in Our Lot
Robert F. Kyle, Mgr.
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GOP
til
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